Editorial Reviews Music Review:
Music Review
The Best of Pigface: Preaching to the Perverted
Sphor: Clarinet Concertos 3 & 4/ Potpourri
Symphonies 3 & 9 / Overtures / Violin Concerto
Ultimate Chillout Classics [Import]
The Ties That Bind: The Best of Levon Helm 1975-1996
Tinsel Town Rebellion [Import] [Limited Edition] [Live]
Twin Best [Import] [Limited Edition]
The Million Dollar Hotel: Music From The Motion Picture (2000 Film) [Soundtrack]
Trilogy: Conflict, Climax, Resolution [Explicit Lyrics]
The William Byrd Edition, Vol. 3: Early Latin Church Music & Propers for the Epiphany
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In perhaps the most potent of his speeches released on CD (this one recorded in 1995 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology), linguist and political critic Noam Chomsky frankly addresses the evident--but largely undiscussed--lines of class in American society, comparing, for example, American labor laws and practices with those of its global comrades. "The government," Chomsky says, quoting John Dewey, his favorite Democratic philosopher, "is the shadow cast by business over society." He bemoans corporate propaganda, the crushing of unions, and the "created wants" that have left us "a devastated peasant society.... People are scared, angry, and hostile." Pretty tough stuff, but Chomsky does offer one ray of hope: "If you want to change something, change the substance, not the shadow." --Michael Ruby